Chao News client reporter Yang Qian correspondent Xu Youjia.
Recently, Mr. Li (pseudonym) and his wife caught up with a fashionable "barbecue around the stove" with a "sense of atmosphere".
In addition to sweet potatoes and rice cakes, the couple's favorite is barbecue, and Mr. Li prepared beef, pork belly, chicken wings, sausages and ......Get ready for a sumptuous winter feast.
The husband and wife chatted while having a barbecue.
in Visual China.
In order to keep warm, they closed the doors and windows of their house tightly, and this meal lasted for three hours. Slowly, Mr. Li's consciousness began to blur, he fell to the ground, and after waking up, he instantly lost consciousness in the bathroom and fell to wake up again.
Her lover, Ms. Zhang, was slightly mild, with a headache, dizziness, a swollen head, and nausea and vomiting.
The situation became more and more wrong, and the two of them came to the nearest Hangzhou Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
This friend immediately called ** and said that we might be carbon monoxide poisoning, and asked us to quickly open the window to ventilate and go to the hospital. ”
After receiving the emergency department, the patient's blood gas analysis was immediately completed, and Mr. Li's carbon monoxide hemoglobin was 201%, Ms. Zhang's carbon monoxide hemoglobin 164%, the patient may have carbon monoxide encephalopathy, and after hospitalization, he was evaluated by the ** team and then subjected to hyperbaric oxygen **, and the ** patient has improved significantly.
Zhu Xuzhen, deputy director of the neurology department of Hangzhou Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, said that carbon monoxide is colorless and odorless, and it is difficult for people to detect. The common cause of poisoning is to burn charcoal for heating in a closed or poorly ventilated room, and when using gas to cook hot pots, make barbecues or use gas water heaters, due to incomplete combustion and poor exhaust emissions, the concentration of carbon monoxide in indoor air increases. Cooking tea around the stove in a confined space can easily cause carbon monoxide poisoning, such as carbon monoxide poisoning after a couple barbecuing around the stove with the window closed in this article. In the event of carbon monoxide poisoning, there are the following first aid treatments:
Carbon monoxide gas is slightly lighter than air, and first responders can choose to enter the poisoning scene in a low posture or prostrate down, and immediately open the doors and windows to circulate the poisoning scene and the outside environment as soon as possible. Never touch indoor appliances, do not ring the doorbell and turn on the switch of the indoor light, in case of **.
Quickly cut off carbon monoxide**, such as by turning off a water heater or gas line switch. Move the patient to a place with fresh air and good ventilation to keep the airway open. At the same time, call 120 Ambulance** to call an ambulance.
Untie the collar and belt of the patient's shirt to keep breathing easy. Tilt the patient's head to one side to prevent suffocation due to aspiration of vomit. If the heart beats or breathing stops, compressions and rescue breaths should be performed immediately.
* For acute carbon monoxide poisoning, the most important tool is hyperbaric oxygen, which is most effective within 6 hours of onset. Hyperbaric oxygen is to use more oxygen molecules to "snatch" the hemoglobin in the sick carboxyhemoglobin to re-form normal oxyhemoglobin and re-transport oxygen to the whole body, thereby correcting the state of cellular hypoxia.
Experts remind that generally patients with carbon monoxide poisoning need to undergo hyperbaric oxygen for 10-14 days in a row, and if the patient feels that the body is okay after several times, it will be interrupted or even delayed, which may lead to the occurrence of late-onset encephalopathy. Carbon monoxide poisoning late-onset encephalopathy refers to the recurrence of a group of neuropsychiatric symptoms mainly acute dementia after a group of neuropsychiatric symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning patients who have recovered from acute poisoning symptoms and have behaved normally or near normal for several days and weeks after recovery. Therefore, patients with carbon monoxide poisoning should follow their doctor's advice and take continuous hyperbaric oxygen (CPO)** as soon as possible to minimize the development of late-onset encephalopathy.
*Please indicate the source".